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From 
Vimy to Passchendaele
1917
The Canadian Corps from OCT to NOV 1917,  Advanced across this valley then in a treacherous morass, captured and held the Passchendaelle Ridge.  From this action, Canadian Troops won nine Victoria Crosses.
 

Passchendaele, Memorial to the Canadians

(From the centre of the memorial grounds one can see, down a long avenue of trees, the rebuilt spires of Ypres.)







Following the victory at Vimy, the Canadians continued operations in the Arras area to divert attention from the French front and to conceal from the Germans the planned offensive in Flanders. In the Battle of Hill 70, August 15-25, Canadian forces captured this strategic position on the northern approach to the city of Lens and secured the western part of the city. The fighting here cost the Canadian Corps 9,198 casualties. However, considerable ground was gained and the battle hampered enemy plans to send fresh troops to Flanders.
 
 


(Ironsides Image - Blowing of a Mine "Vimy")





To the south the French offensive in Lorraine under General Nivelle was an unmitigated disaster. With losses in the neighbourhood of 200,000 men, it precipitated a wave of mutinies that paralysed the French army for months.
 

(Ironsides Image - One Soldier, out of 18 "in image" provides cover fire. No wonder the losses were high! )





In July, the British commander Sir Douglas Haig launched his disastrous drive in Flanders designed to break through the front and capture the German submarine bases on the Belgian coast. The offensive had had a successful prelude at Messines in June, but this local success was followed by weeks of delay.
 

The second and main stage of the attack got under way with a tremendous artillery barrage that not only forewarned the Germans, but also ground the battlefield into potholes and dust. Summer rains poured down on the very night that the offensive began and in no time the area became an impassable swamp. As the British soldiers struggled in the morass, the Germans inflicted frightful casualties from lines fortified with machine guns placed in concrete pill boxes.
 
 


(Ironsides Image - Ypres - Ruined Cloth Hall & Grand Place, prior to total destruction in 1917)





In the next four months at Ypres only negligible advances were made. Early in October, although the main objectives were still in German hands and the British forces were reaching the point of exhaustion, Haig determined on one more drive. The Canadian Corps was ordered to relieve the decimated Anzac forces in the Ypres sector and prepare for the capture of Passchendaele.
 

( Ironsides Image - View of the Menin Road, looking towards Ypres, 1917)





General Currie inspected the muddy battlefield and protested that the operation was impossible without heavy cost. He was overruled and so began careful and painstaking preparations for the assault. In a series of attacks beginning on October 26, 20,000 men under heavy fire inched their way from shell crater to shell crater. Then on October 30, with two British divisions, the Canadians began the assault on Passchendale itself. They gained the ruined outskirts of the village during a violent rainstorm and for five days they held on grimly, often waist deep in mud and exposed to a hail of jagged iron from German shelling. On November 6, when reinforcements arrived, four fifths of the attackers were dead. Currie's estimate of 16,000 casualties proved frighteningly accurate. Passchendaele had become a Canadian Calvary. The award of no fewer than nine Victoria Crosses testified to the heroic determination and skill with which Canadian soldiers played their part in the bitter struggle for Passchendaele.
 
 

Article By: Veterans Affairs Canada

(IRONSIDES - France's Marshall Foch, who directed the Allied Strategy that won the Great War)





Canadian Corps - Summary of Intelligence 11 Nov 1917
No. 7 Overseas Battery Siege Artillery
 

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